van Enkhuizen Jordy, Acheson Dean, Risbrough Victoria, Drummond Sean, Geyer Mark A, Young Jared W
Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive MC 0804, La Jolla, CA 92093-0804USA; Division of Pharmacology, Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences, Utrecht University, Universiteitsweg 99, 3584 CG Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive MC 0804, La Jolla, CA 92093-0804USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2014 Mar 15;261:40-8. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2013.12.003. Epub 2013 Dec 12.
Several groups undergo extended periods without sleep due to working conditions or mental illness. Such sleep deprivation (SD) can deleteriously affect attentional processes and disrupt work and family functioning. Understanding the biological underpinnings of SD effects may assist in developing sleep therapies and cognitive enhancers. Utilizing cross-species tests of attentional processing in humans and rodents would aid in mechanistic studies examining SD-induced inattention. We assessed the effects of 36h of: (1) Total SD (TSD) in healthy male and female humans (n=50); and (2) REM SD (RSD) in male C57BL/6 mice (n=26) on performance in the cross-species 5-choice continuous performance test (5C-CPT). The 5C-CPT includes target trials on which subjects were required to respond and non-target trials on which subjects were required to inhibit from responding. TSD-induced effects on human psychomotor vigilance test (PVT) were also examined. Effects of SD were also examined on mice split into good and poor performance groups based on pre-deprivation scores. In the human 5C-CPT, TSD decreased hit rate and vigilance with trend-level effects on accuracy. In the PVT, TSD slowed response times and increased lapses. In the mouse 5C-CPT, RSD reduced accuracy and hit rate with trend-level effects on vigilance, primarily in good performers. In conclusion, SD induced impaired 5C-CPT performance in both humans and mice and validates the 5C-CPT as a cross-species translational task. The 5C-CPT can be used to examine mechanisms underlying SD-induced deficits in vigilance and assist in testing putative cognitive enhancers.
由于工作条件或精神疾病,有几个群体经历了长时间的睡眠不足。这种睡眠剥夺(SD)会对注意力过程产生有害影响,并扰乱工作和家庭功能。了解SD影响的生物学基础可能有助于开发睡眠疗法和认知增强剂。利用人类和啮齿动物注意力加工的跨物种测试将有助于进行研究SD引起的注意力不集中的机制研究。我们评估了36小时的以下情况对跨物种5选连续作业测试(5C-CPT)表现的影响:(1)健康男性和女性(n=50)的完全睡眠剥夺(TSD);(2)雄性C57BL/6小鼠(n=26)的快速眼动睡眠剥夺(RSD)。5C-CPT包括要求受试者做出反应的目标试验和要求受试者抑制反应的非目标试验。还研究了TSD对人类心理运动警觉性测试(PVT)的影响。根据剥夺前的分数将小鼠分为表现好和表现差的组,也研究了SD对这些组的影响。在人类5C-CPT中,TSD降低了命中率和警觉性,对准确性有趋势性影响。在PVT中,TSD减慢了反应时间并增加了失误次数。在小鼠5C-CPT中,RSD降低了准确性和命中率,对警觉性有趋势性影响,主要在表现好的小鼠中。总之,SD在人类和小鼠中均导致5C-CPT表现受损,并验证了5C-CPT作为一种跨物种转化任务的有效性。5C-CPT可用于研究SD引起的警觉性缺陷的潜在机制,并有助于测试假定的认知增强剂。